@@4me I will feed them to my endlers, corydoras and neon tetras. I got my worms from inside my plants substrate funny enough. I only recognized them as being grindal worms from your videos 😅
@@casvanmarcel That is great! I would setup a couple containers to culture worms for continues supply for feeding fish. All the best on your adventure!
I'm really looking forward the springtails video. Especially in context of grindal worms and springtails together. Because I have them both but so far springtails are apart from my grindal culture. I think springtails might help with removing mold in the grindal box but I'll wait for your conclusions 😊
One video is coming this Tuesday (7am on November 9th). And there are more in the following months with details on each experiment I run. As of now I believe Springtails do not go after mold. They persistently get into every Grindal worms culture I setup so far. And it seems to me that Springtails may enjoy the company of Grindal worms for the waste produced by Grindal worms and whatever else mold growth on. So, I think that Springtails feed on what mold growth and that is what makes them so great in terrariums...and in our apartments too. Details in future videos.
I've been keeping Grindal worms, Springtails and Grindal worms among other critters on the land platform in my 29 gal paludarium in preparation for Efts. It's hard to say how big the population of Grindal worms (or any other critters) at any given moment in this tank - I don't really feed them the way I feed in small plastic containers setting up conditions for critters to gather in one spot. But occasionally I see them here and there. So the culture is certainly stable.
@@filamas No. I've been preparing the land platform for red-spotted newts in terrestrial stage of development (Eft) that I may get in coming months or in a couple years if my newts get babies 🙂
I've been culturing grindal worms on synthetic polyester: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-rtjq91esfMY.html So, yes. They should be fine on cocopeat.